Story highlights

On Tuesday, the school is taking down the trees, which have stood for more than 130 years

Two years of rescue efforts could not save them. So, Tuesday, Auburn University cut down two iconic trees that a disappointed fan of its intrastate rival poisoned after his team lost a game to Auburn.

The landmark live oaks, used for celebrations by fans, who rolled them with toilet paper after big victories, were more than 130 years old. On Tuesday, they were coming down branch by branch from the campus gathering place, Toomer's Corner.

Local television news cameras broadcast the removal live.

"While it is sad, it will do nothing to change the spirit of Auburn," Auburn junior Carlee Clark told CNN iReport Tuesday, as the trees came down. "I think I speak for students and alumni alike when I say that I count it a privilege to be a part of this family, and the presence or absence of two trees could never alter that."

In 2010, both the Auburn Tigers and the University of Alabama Crimson Tide football teams were nationally ranked.

Photos: Auburn says goodbye to its oaks 18 photos

Photos: Auburn says goodbye to its oaks18 photos

Auburn says goodbye to its oaks – Crews remove pieces of live oaks on Tuesday, April 23, at Toomer's Corner in Auburn, Alabama. Auburn University spent two years trying to save the trees that a fan of rival Alabama poisoned in 2010. Auburn fans would roll the iconic oaks with toilet paper after big victories, and they did so for the last time on Saturday.

Hide Caption

1 of 18

Photos: Auburn says goodbye to its oaks18 photos

Auburn says goodbye to its oaks – A crane pulls off the top of the trunk Tuesday.

Hide Caption

2 of 18

Photos: Auburn says goodbye to its oaks18 photos

Auburn says goodbye to its oaks – Crews examine a trunk on the street on Tuesday.

Hide Caption

3 of 18

Photos: Auburn says goodbye to its oaks18 photos

Auburn says goodbye to its oaks – A woman is overcome with emotion while watching the trees get cut down on Tuesday.

Hide Caption

4 of 18

Photos: Auburn says goodbye to its oaks18 photos

Photos: Auburn says goodbye to its oaks – A crane grabs a tree trunk on Tuesday.

Hide Caption

5 of 18

Photos: Auburn says goodbye to its oaks18 photos

Auburn says goodbye to its oaks – A crew member saws a branch on Tuesday.

Hide Caption

6 of 18

Photos: Auburn says goodbye to its oaks18 photos

Auburn says goodbye to its oaks – A crew member works to bring down a live oak tree on Tuesday.

Hide Caption

7 of 18

Photos: Auburn says goodbye to its oaks18 photos

Auburn says goodbye to its oaks – Spectators watch as crews cut down a live oak on Tuesday.

Hide Caption

8 of 18

Photos: Auburn says goodbye to its oaks18 photos

Auburn says goodbye to its oaks – A crane is positioned to bring down the oak on Tuesday.

Hide Caption

9 of 18

Photos: Auburn says goodbye to its oaks18 photos

Auburn says goodbye to its oaks – One of the branches is chopped off on Tuesday.

Tide fan Harvey Updyke didn't like losing and did something about it, which he confessed anonymously two months later on a UA sports radio show. He called in as "Al from Dadeville."

"Let me tell you what I did the weekend after the Iron Bowl. I went to Auburn, Alabama, because I live 30 miles away," the caller said. "And I poisoned the two Toomer's trees."

He ended the call with "Roll Damn Tide," a battle cry for the University of Alabama.

The herbicide was highly potent, and tests of soil samples confirmed that he had applied a liberal amount. He had doused the soil around the trees.

When news about the poisoning spread on campus, students rallied around the trees and rolled them with toilet paper.

Updyke, who is in his mid-60s, was arrested. He pleaded guilty in March and will serve at least six months of a three-year sentence for criminal damage to an agricultural facility, a felony.

Upon release, he will be under five years of supervised probation, which includes a 7 p.m. curfew, a ban on attending any collegiate event and a ban on stepping onto Auburn University property.

He may be assessed for restitution.

Saturday night, students and fans of the Auburn Tigers gave the two trees that had graced the campus since the 1800s a final rolling. Next year, two new oaks will be planted in their place.

Tori Allen, a 2008 graduate, drove from Atlanta to say one last goodbye to the trees.

"The trees were always constant when I was in school and they definitely symbolized the Auburn family and pride, so I felt I owed it to them," Allen told CNN iReport. "A lot of people I know didn't want to go because they wanted to remember them as they used to be, not the shell they are now. But I didn't want to rob myself of the memory of saying goodbye."

She said the university had a band that played all throughout the night and blocked off the area "so it could be one big block party."

The oaks weren't just rolled after football games, she said.

"Any time someone wanted to celebrate anything, they were rolled. Presidential elections; when classes were canceled because of a hurricane; graduation; weddings; anything. The trees symbolized a place to celebrate your joy, whether it involved a sport or not," Allen said. "It's something special to see people of every age, infants to elderly, finding glee in tossing toilet paper around, screaming our cheers and singing the fight song."